Education Articles

Oral Language Articles

A spoken language is a human natural language in which the words are uttered through the mouth. Almost all languages are spoken languages.

Spoken language stands in contrast to written language. Modern linguistics regards the spoken language as the natural or the primary medium of human language for some obvious reasons. From the point of view of linguistic evolution, spoken is prior to written language. The wrtiting system of any language is always “invented” by its users to record speech when the need arises. Even in today’s world there are still many languages that can only be spoken but not written. Then in everyday communication, spoken language plays a greater role than writing in terms of the amount of information conveyed. And also, spoken language is always the way in which every native speaker acquires his mother tongue, and writing is learned and taught later when he goes to school. For modern linguistis, spoken language reveals many true features of human speech while written language is only “revised” record of speech. Thus their data for investigation and analysis are mostly drawn from everyday speech, which they regard as authentic. Even from the point of view of grammar, sopken language usually has its own set of grammar which sometimes may quite different from that in written language. Source: Wikipedia.

1: In Defense of Code-Switching (Not Rated)
Bruce Deitrick Price...I've become cynical about educators; so many of their ideas turn out ruinous. A big portion of the public seems to be similarly suspicious. Perhaps that’s why, when the local paper discussed a new book, Teaching Standard English in Urban Classrooms, many people were quick to condemn what they assumed was more of the same old nonsense. This was my own initial reaction. But I quickly recanted. I imagined the code-switching strategy in practice. I became sure that, at the e